Biosynthesis and Metabolism of Phenylethyl (Pressor) Amines

This report presents the likely pathways in the biosynthesis of phenylethyl (pressor) amines from their amino acid precursors, discusses the relative ...
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Biosynthesis and Metabolism of Phenylethyl (Pressor) Amines KARL H. BEYER

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Sharp and Dohme, Inc., Glenolden, Pa.

This report presents the likely pathways in the bio­ synthesis of phenylethyl (pressor) amines from their amino acid precursors, discusses the relative signifi­ cance of the various modes b y which they may b e inactivated in the b o d y , and considers the interplay of these factors as they may relate to hypertension.

Γhysiologically, hypertension may be defined as a n elevation of blood pressure above the normal limits of variability. There are at least five basic factors involved in the m a i n ­ tenance of blood pressure. Aberrations of any one or a combination of these factors could produce an elevation affecting principally systolic or diastolic pressure, or influencing both more or less equally. These factors include peripheral resistance, elasticity of the arteries, cardiac output (heart rate and stroke volume), blood volume, and viscosity of the blood. T h e central nervous system, the endocrine glands, and the kidney must exert their influ­ ence on blood pressure through the above factors. A clinical diagnosis of essential hypertension usually carries no connotation as to the etiology of the condition, and yet the preponderance of literature directing attention to the etiological role of one or another organ i n the production of hypertension very often influences our everyday thoughts on the subject. Predominantly, the immediate visceral response to stress is mediated through the adrenergic components of the autonomic nervous system. T h e adrenergic components are those thoracolumbar autonomic nerves whose postganglionic fibers elaborate adrena­ line, or arterenoi, together with the adrenal medulla whose chromaffin cells are analogous embryologically and functionally to the adrenergic postganglionic neurones (107). T h e most obvious manifestation of this overfunction, immediately and progressively, will de­ pend generally on the individual. Manifestations of one or another imbalance of the autonomic nervous system m a y take the familiar form of a colitis, peptic ulcer, hyperten­ sion, or certain other aberrations of function depending on the individual. T h e immediate response to stress i n a normotensive person m a y be considered to fall in the alarm reaction stage of what Selye (145, 147) has elected to call a general adaptation syndrome, whose manifestations are essentially independent of the specific nature of the stress. T h e development of clinically sustained hypertension has been considered b y h i m to fall into a second stage of resistance to a prolonged exposure to stress. Similarly, Wolf et al. (166) have presented recently a n interesting discussion of hypertension as a reaction pattern to stress. T h e very readable article b y White (164) also stresses the importance of the neurogenic aspects of early hypertension as a major factor that must be dealt with i n the management of this disease. W h a t Selye described as the immediate response to stress i n a normotensive indivi­ dual graduates i n the likely candidate into what Corcoran, Taylor, and Page (51, 52) have termed early essential hypertension. T h i s state is characterized b y moderate, widely fluctuant, sometimes remitting, increases of arterial pressure. It is accompanied 37

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

ADVANCES IN CHEMISTRY SERIES

38

by no change or minimal evidences of vascular or renal damage (44,88) when the patient is at rest. Outwardly, these patients may or may not appear to be unstable emotionally, but Jacobsen (101) has stated that under stress the action potential measurements of even their skeletal muscles become extremely high. Stroke, v o l . / c c .

80 60 40

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B l o o d pressure, m m . Hg

Renal blood % change

flow,

230 210 190 170 150 130 110

+5 0 -10 -20

Filtration fraction U r i n e flow, c c . / m i n .

0.30 0.20 10 0

ί

I

Figure 1. Effect of Unpleasant Interview on C a r d i a c Stroke V o l ­ ume, Blood Pressure, Renal Blood Flow, Filtration Fraction, and Urine Flow of Patient ( ? 66) Although there may be no demonstrable alteration i n the function of the cardiovascu­ lar system or the kidneys of such patients, other than the sustained elevation of blood pres­ sure when they are at rest, the extreme responsiveness of these systems to emotional stress is remarkable. There may be no alteration of the inherent ability of an organ or tissue to respond to a stimulus. Instead, their greater reactivity is to an increased transmission of nerve impulses i n response to what may be a psychogenic stimulus. Wolf, Pfeiffer, R i p ­ ley, Winter, and Wolff (166) have demonstrated such changes i n their patients admirably, and two of their figures from a recent publication illustrate this point. Figure 1 shows the effect of " t r a u m a t i c " or unpleasant interview on blood pressure, cardiac stroke volume, renal blood flow, and the fraction of the renal blood flow that was filtered at the glomeruli (filtration fraction). In response to the interview both the systolic and diastolic blood pressure and the stroke volume of the heart increased. There was a decrease in the flow of blood through the kidney, and this decrease was due predominantly to an efferent arteriolar constriction since the filtration fraction was increased somewhat. Figure 2 shows the effect of reassurance and sedation on the blood pressure and renal function and the promptness with which this effect could be reversed b y introducing a topic of significant conflict into the discussion. T h e reassurance and sedation decreased blood pressure, increased renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate, and also increased the filtration fraction; this would indicate that afferent as well as efferent arteriolar con­ striction was present i n the kidneys. A t the onset of the unpleasant part of the interview these effects were reversed on the whole, and in the last portion of the interview a very i n ­ teresting change i n renal hemodynamics may be seen to have occurred. A t this point there was an increase in renal plasma flow and a decrease in the filtration fractions. T o be sure, this change may be thought to be within analytical error, and yet it is most tempting to interpret the increase in blood flow as being attributable to the opening of subcortical renal shunts as described b y Trueta et al. (157). Wilkins et al. (165) studied the effects of sympathectomy on the function of various organs and concluded that the reduction or abolition of reflex vasopressor overshoots of arterial pressure (after blood pressure-lower-

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

39

BEYER—PHENYLETHYL (PRESSOR) AMINES

ing procedures) and their substitution by a more stable, or gradual, homeostatic mecha­ nism may be a very important hemodynamic effect of the operation. Following repeated insults to the vascular system mediated through or at least initi­ ated i n the nervous system the histologic "fractures" of the integument of the blood ves­ sels result i n thickening and loss of elasticity. Since the arterioles are the vessels princi­ pally involved i n the alteration of arterial pressure they are apt to bear the brunt of the i n ­ jury. T h u s the condition gradually progresses to a second phase that Corcoran and Page (51) have called established essential hypertension. D u r i n g this stage the blood pressure is more sustained and at a higher level, is less susceptible to sedation and other therapeu­ tic or surgical measures, and is accompanied b y definitive evidence of cardiovascular and renal damage. I n the instance of malignant hypertension these various phases are passed through i n a matter of months frequently, instead of years. If one is to admit both neurogenic and nephrogenic as well as other factors i n the pathogenesis of hypertension, then the neurogenic element probably plays its dominant role in the initial stages of the disease. T h u s it would be anticipated that medical (164) surgical (72,149,150) approaches to therapy on the neurogenic basis should be the more effective the sooner the disease is recognized. Indeed any nephrogenic component of the disease m a y be thought to follow changes i n the renal blood flow usually, rather than to initiate them. I n substantiation of this point, renal function studies indicate that de­ monstrable alterations of function i n the cells lining the renal tubules follow rather than

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o

F i l t r a t i o n fraction % c h a n g e , 0 =c= 0.227

+10 -j- 5 0 - 5 -10

G l o m . l i l t , rate % change, 0 ο 101

+40 +30 +20 + 10

r

7////Λ

E f f e c t i v e p l a s m a flow % c h a n g e , 0 ο 450

V i l l i

Figure 2.

Effect of Reassurance and Sedation on Blood Pressure and Renal Functions of Hypertensive Patient

Following the period of reassurance, indicated in black, a topic of emotional con­ flict to the patient was introduced into the interview {166) precede the alterations of renal blood flow (44, 51, 88). I n this connection the review b y Smith (148) of the evidence relating urologie disease to hypertension could hardly be cited to substantiate the nephrogenic factor as a dominant one i n the early etiology of essential hypertension i n humans. Presenting the subject i n a different perspective, Goldblatt

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

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ADVANCES IN CHEMISTRY SERIES

(80) has published an interesting review of the literature pertaining to the renal origin of hypertension. T h e chemical mediator or mediators of the neurogenic element in hypertension may be considered to be noradrenaline (synonym: arterenol, norepinephrine), adrenaline, or both. W i t h i n recent years a certain orderliness has evolved i n this controversial field so that the problems that remain seem better defined and approachable from an experimental stand­ point. T h e uncertainty as to the nature of the chemical mediator of adrenergic nerves is evident if one recalls that from a textbook standpoint adrenergic nerves are supposed to mediate their effects through the liberation of sympathin. Whereas adrenaline is capable of eliciting both excitatory and inhibitory effects, both a Sympathin Ε (excitatory) and a Sympathin I (inhibitory) were postulated, and much experimentation has been carried out to support the sympathin hypothesis. T h e evidence up to 1937 has been summarized b y Cannon and Rosenblueth (48,1$) who were the earlier exponents of this view. Opposing the sympathin theory of chemical mediation were the contemporary data of Loewi (118) and of G a d d u m and his associates (76-79) that indicated adrenaline was the chemical mediator. It had been anticipated b y Barger and Dale (18) i n their classic (1910) article that adrenaline probably was not the chemical mediator, for this theory "involves the assump­ tion of a stricter parallelism between the two actions than actually exists. Adrenine has, in common with other methylamino bases of its catechol group, the property of exaggerat­ ing inhibitor as compared with motor effects. T h e action of some other bases, particu­ larly of the amino and ethylamino bases of the catechol group, corresponds more closely

k H M M A M M M U Figure 3. Effect of Hepatic Nerve Stimulation (15 Seconds) a n d Intravenous Injections of Adrenaline a n d Noradrenaline on Arterial Blood Pressure a n d Denervated Nictitating Membrane of Anesthetized C a t Previous injection of cocaine (75)

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

41

BEYER—PHENYLETHYL (PRESSOR) AMINES

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with that of sympathetic nerves than does that of adrenine." T h e y also anticipated, as in the above quotation, the hypothesis proposed b y B a c q (10) and reiterated b y Stehle and Ellsworth (158) and b y Greer, Pinkston, Baxter, and Brannon (84) that noradrenaline (arterenoi) more closely simulated the properties of Sympathin Ε as released following he­ patic nerve stimulation. Barger and Dale (18) gave the principal biological methods for distinguishing between the action of adrenaline and its nonmethyiated counterpart. Within the past 2 or 3 years many of these differences have become reconciled. T h e avail­ ability of ^-arterenoi, following its resolution i n 1948 b y Tullar (158), has already contrib­ uted to the progress in this difficult field. T h e present status of the adrenaline against sympathin mediation of nerve impulses would indicate that both adrenaline and arterenoi are liberated. I n the previous evidence of G a d d u m et al. (74, 76-79) adrenaline clearly was liberated on stimulation of certain nerves. M o r e recently G a d d u m and Goodwin (75) confirmed Cannon's (48) early experiments that the pressor response to hepatic nerve stimulation probably was not adrenaline. Where comparisons were made, the effect of liver sympathin resembled those of noradrenaline more closely than of adrenaline. T h e y conclude that there is no evidence against the theory that liver sympathin is noradrenaline (75). One of their illustrations comparing the effect of hepatic nerve stimulation with that of adrenaline and noradrenaline on blood pressure and the denervated nictitating membrane of the cat is reproduced i n Figure 3. T h e character of the blood pressure curve and the relative pressor effect and membrane contraction following nerve stimulation were quite similar to those caused b y the intrave­ nous injection of noradrenaline. West (168) confirmed the previous observation of Dawes (57) that the relation between doses of adrenaline producing equal rises of blood pressure b y the jugular and b y the portal routes of administration differed according to the amount injected. T h i s jugular/portal equipressor ratio remained constant for ^-noradrenaline. It would appear that this indicates a difference i n the inactivation of the two compounds b y the liver where the arterenoi acts as the principal nerve mediator. T h i s same qualitative difference between adrenaline and noradrenaline obtains for the splenic artery/splenic vein equipressor dosage-response ratios as well, and both observa­ tions quite possibly m a y find their explanation i n the recent work of Euler (64-70). H e has found that the pressor substance isolated from the heart, blood, liver, and spleen has predominantly the characteristics of noradrenaline. T h u s , he has considered Sympathin Ε to be identical with l-noradrenaiine. Figure 4 is one of the illustrations from a recent publication b y Euler. After the a d ­ ministration of a n adrenolytic agent, Dibenamine, the pressor effect of adrenaline was i n large measure reversed whereas the pressor response to corresponding increments of lnoradrenaline and to extracts of spleen or splenic nerve remained upright and monophasic. I n general the effect of hepatic nerve stimulation is not affected b y amounts of adrenolytic agents that will reverse the response to epinephrine (48, 75,168). B a c q and Fischer (11) have reported that extracts of mammalian spleen contained only noradrenaline, extracts of mammalian coronary nerves and arteries only adrenaline, but extracts of splenic nerves and sympathetic chains yield a mixture of adrenaline and noradrenaline. T h e y have interpreted this variation as being due to the probability that the synthesis of adrenaline is through the transmethylation of noradrenaline as a final step and that this takes place slowly or not at all in some tissues.

Synthesis of Pressor Amines T h e synthesis of pressor amines i n the body may convincingly be considered to begin with the essential amino acid, phenylalanine as illustrated i n Table I. G u r i n and D e l l u v a (86) have reported that phenylalanine labeled with tritium, or containing C located both i n the carboxyl group and i n the position adjacent thereto, was converted i n the rat to r a ­ dioactive adrenaline. Only one C atom was present in the side chain and it was i n the terminal group bearing the secondary amine (86). However the intermediate steps i n the synthesis are b y no means so certain, nor does this necessarily preclude other paths of s y n ­ thesis. 1 4

1 4

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

Phenylalanine

k

2

AH

Benzaldehyde

+

2

2

Glycine

NH

CH —COOH

Phenylserine

/C-C-H

I

^-CHOH—CH—COOH

J

2

^-CH —CH—COOH

2

Tyrosine

N H

Hydroxyphenylserine

OH

^CHOH—CH—COOH

OH

1

2

NH 2

N H 2

Dihydroxyphenylserine ( D O P S )

OH

1 JOH

CHOH—CH—COOH

Dihydroxyphenylalanine ( D O P A )

;OH

2

/T-CH —CH—COOH

I

C H 2

N H

CH2 2

N H

2

Norepinephrine (syn: noradrenaline, arterenol)

OH

Hi

2

ysrCKOR—CH

Dihydroxyphenylethylamine

OH

Γ

y-y

Alternative Schemes for Synthesis of Epinephrine in the Body

-CH —CH—COOH

Table I.

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-

43

BEYER—PHENYLETHYL (PRESSOR) AMINES

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T h e biological conversion of phenylalanine to tyrosine has been demonstrated b y Moss and Schoenheimer (118) who administered phenylalanine-^ to rats and recovered tyrosine containing deuterium from their bodies. I n vitro this conversion could be ac­ complished i n the presence of iron and hydrogen peroxide (ISO). T h e decarboxylation of tyrosine to yield the pressor agent tyramine probably is not a step i n direct line to the syn­ thesis of epinephrine, but the compound long has played a role i n investigators' thoughts about hypertension. There is a decarboxylase i n various mammalian tissues, including kidney and pancreas, capable of converting tyrosine to tyramine (87, 62, 68, 71,93, 96).

Figure 4.

Blood

Pressure Records from Anesthetized Cat Administration of Adrenolytic Agent

before and

following

A = Before Dibenamine; β = after 5 mg. Dibenamine per kg.; time = 0.5-minute intervals (67) T h e oxidation of tyrosine to 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine ( D O P A ) can be shown to take place i n vitro both enzymatically and b y noncatalytic measures (7, 8,91,181,138), but the precise i n vivo mechanism is less certain. T h e ascorbic-dehydroascorbic acid system is capable of bringing about this oxidation i n vitro (20), and it has been shown to stabilize epinephrine i n the adrenal gland (92). I n unpublished work it was found that p o ­ tato phenol oxidase is capable of bringing about the oxidation of the phenolic to the cate­ chol nucleus, as it does i n the case of tyramine. However, Bhagvat and Kichter (81) have surveyed a number of animal species and they could not demonstrate a phenol oxi­ dase in mammalian tissues by the conventional methods. Probably the most direct i n vivo evidence is that of Medes (117) who reported the recovery of £-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine from urine when large amounts of tyrosine were given to a patient diagnosed as hav­ ing tyrosinosis. Although it is uncertain as to just what step comes next, it is probable that either de­ carboxylation or the introduction of the hydroxyl group on the carbon atom adjacent to the ring must occur, with transmethylation of arterenol to adrenaline being the last step i n the synthesis (87). Certainly the anaerobic decarboxylation of D O P A to the correspond­ ing 1-3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine occurs smoothly i n the presence of kidney, liver, and other organs, as was described b y Holtz et al. (100). B o t h he and Blaschko (85-37) have proposed that this step takes place i n the synthesis of Z-adrenaline. Regarding the alter­ native pathway involving iV-methylation before decarboxylation, Heard and Raper (91) reported that the action of tyrosinase (phenol oxidase) on iV-methyl D O P A i n vitro yielded adrenalone, the ketone of adrenaline, but the perfusion of the ketone through the adrenal gland did not result i n its reduction to adrenaline. I n addition, Blaschko (85) reported that D O P A decarboxylase did not decarboxylate N-methyl-3,4-dmydroxyphenylalaiune. Whether or not the introduction of an hydroxyl group into the side chain of D O P A , as by beta oxidation, occurs before or after decarboxylation is uncertain. It is this reviewer's

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

44

ADVANCES IN CHEMISTRY SERIES

opinion that the hydroxyl group will be found, eventually, to be introduced into the synthesis of epinephrine at some point before decarboxylation of the amino acid precursor. Vinet (161, 162) has claimed that the adrenal medulla is capable of converting 3,4dihydroxyphenylethylamine, formed from the decarboxylation of D O P A i n the kidney, to epinephrine i n vitro, which i n effect completes the synthesis. According to him, the adrenal medulla cannot decarboxylate D O P A . Similarly, Schapira (ljO) reported that whereas guinea pig kidney could decarboxylate D O P A , the adrenal medulla did not contain the decarboxylase and that adrenaline inhibited the decarboxylation of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine. Just how the hydroxyl group is introduced into the side chain is not clear, if this is the principal course of the synthesis, but it seems certain that this precedes methyiation (37). Recently d u Vigneaud and his associates (160) fed C radiomethylmethionine to rats and succeeded i n isolating adrenaline bearing the radioactive group 1 4

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I

PHENYLSERINE

30

60

90

120

160

MINUTE6 Figure 5. Anaerobic Decarboxylation o f Phenylserine, D i h y d r o x y p h e n y l a l a n i n e (DOPA), and Dihydroxyphenylserine (DOPS) by Supernatant from 2 0 % Homogenate of Dog Kidney in 0.1 M Phosphate Buffer Final concentration of substrates = 0.02 mM.; adjusted to 6.5

pH

from their adrenal glands. T h u s the transmethylation reaction i n the synthesis of adrenaline is indicated. T h i s would seem to complement nicely the aforementioned concepts of Euler (65, 70) and of B a c q and Fischer (11) that noradrenaline is the principal mediator of adrenergic impulses and is released from those tissues that are not capable of transmethylating it to adrenaline. I n spite of the plausibility of the foregoing hypothesis for the synthesis of adrenaline and arterenoi there is a certain attractiveness to the old proposal of Rosenmund and D o r n saft (187) that has lost ground b y neglect and b y the strengthening of the alternative scheme just presented. It was their view that through the condensation of benzaldehyde, or p-hydroxybenzaldehyde or phenylglyoxylic acid with iV-methylglyeine (sarcosine), p hydroxy-iST-methylphenylserine or its p-phenolie analog would be formed. T h e y synthesized 0-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine. T h e synthesis was repeated b y Guggenheim (85) and more recently b y M a n n a n d Dalgliesh (115). Hartung (90) prepared the series of phenylserine, p-hydroxyphenylserine, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine. If the initial aldol condensation between benzaldehyde and glycine or sarcosine takes place i n the body to form phenylserine a n d / o r iV-methylphenylserine, and it is not an u n likely reaction, then it seems possible for the nucleus to undergo the same phenolic oxida-

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

BEYER—PHENYLETHYL (PRESSOR) AMINES

45

tion that has been discussed i n the conversion of phenylalanine —>• tyrosine —>D O P A . Actually it is conceivable that phenylalanine is a precursor of phenylserine, or that tyrosine is converted b y beta oxidation to hydroxyphenylserine. I n either instance the introduction of the hydroxyl group would be into a relatively stable compound, as compared to those bearing a dihydric nucleus. I n addition this step would make the pat­ tern of synthesis of epinephrine through the phenylserines consistent with the strongest evidence cited for the eventual formation of that pressor agent from phenylalanine.

•UINEA ΡΙβ KIDNEY

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DOPA

/

.^DOPA+DIHYDROXYPHENYLETHYL-METHYLAMINE

DOPS D O

SO

p

S

φ ARTERENOL

100 MINUTES

ISO

Figure 6. Inhibitory Effect of Amines on Anaerobic Decar­ boxylation of D O P A a n d D O P S b y Supernatant from 2 0 % Homogenate of Guinea Pig Kidney in 0.1 M Phosphate Buffer Final concentration of substrates = 0.02 mM.; pH adjusted to 6.5 In experiments not published heretofore, it was found that the oxidation of p - h y droxyphenylserine to 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine occurs rapidly i n the presence of phenol oxidase. Contrary to the findings of Blaschko and his associates (89), this laboratory found that 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine and its phenyl and monophenolic precursors were decarboxylated b y the kidney of guinea pigs, cats, and dogs. (When this seeming dis­ crepancy was called to Blaschko's attention he was kind enough to repeat his experiment. I n correspondence with the author he indicated that i n the retest of dihydroxyphenylserine with fresh extract of guinea pig liver there was a very slow formation of carbon dioxide under anaerobic conditions, which was scarcely significant after 1 hour, but which contin­ ued with time. Bioassay of the resulting material indicated that ^-noradrenaline was formed.) A n experiment involving the decarboxylation of these three compounds and D O P A by the anaerobic kidney of the dog is illustrated in F i g u r e d . I n all three species the rate of decarboxylation of the phenylserines does not seem to exceed that for D O P A . T h e decarboxylation of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine was least i n guinea pig kidney, as m a y

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

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46

ADVANCES IN CHEMISTRY SERIES

be seen i n Figure 6. I n this experiment it was found that addition of the corresponding amine to the vessels decreased or abolished the decarboxylation of both D O P A and dihydroxyphenylserine. T h i s was i n keeping with the observation of Schapira that epinephrine inhibited the decarboxylation of D O P A (140). Since it is possible that different stereoisomers were present i n the racemic mixtures with which Blaschko and this laboratory have worked, there may be no real discrepancy between the two observations, a l though from an interpretative standpoint the difference is qualitatively significant. Probably the absolute values for carbon dioxide evolution i n the illustrations have no definitive significance other than that they m a y indicate the relative concentration of the single optical form of the phenylserine derivative i n the racemic mixture that was susceptible to decarboxylation b y the enzyme. One of the principal attractions of this theory is that on decarboxylation of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine, noradrenaline is formed. T h i s avoids the awkward necessity of accounting for the introduction of a hydroxyl group into such a compound as dihydroxyphenylethylamine. Here, again, transmethylation of noradrenaline would be the final step i n the synthesis of adrenaline, as was anticipated b y Blaschko (35-37). T h e pressor amines have been implicated also i n the nephrogenic theories of hypertension. I n 1910 Ewins and Laidlaw (73) commented that the formation of tyramine from tyrosine i n the intestine has quite recently been regarded as playing a part i n certain pathological states i n which a high blood pressure is the most prominent symptom. Contemporarily, B a i n (12) reported that tyramine was excreted i n the urine of hypertensive patients but to a less extent than i n patients having normal blood pressure, the implication being that the elevation i n blood pressure was due to the retention of tyramine. T h e urohypertensin of Abelous and Bardier (1) contained isoamylamine.

Figure 7.

Pressor

Response

in

Anesthetized Cat Circulation

following

Re-establishment

of

Following the initial reports b y Holtz (100) and Blaschko (35-87), B i n g (32, 88) began a series of experiments on dogs that brought into perspective the possible relationship between renal hypertension and the decarboxylation of D O P A i n the kidney. H e demonstrated that if D O P A was injected into a partially or totally ischemic kidney of an anesthetized cat and was allowed to remain there for awhile, the re-establishment of circulation through that organ was accompanied b y an elevation of blood pressure. T h e logical interpretation of this observation finds its basis i n H o l t z ' observation (100) that i n vitro decarboxylation was demonstrable only when the kidney and substrate were maintained under anaerobic conditions. In the presence of air or oxygen, oxidative deamination of the amine occurred simultaneously with decarboxylation so that the carbon dioxide lib-

CHEMICAL FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1949.

47

BEYER—PHENYLETHYL (PRESSOR) AMINES

eration was not readily demonstrable. W h e n D O P A was injected into the ischemic liver or other organs and released to the general circulation of the cat, hypertension did not occur. Neither did a rise i n blood pressure follow the injection of D O P A into the unimpaired kidneys of this animal. T h e interpretation of Bing's experiment was that D O P A was decarboxylated i n the ischemic kidney under conditions that would not support the aerobic deamination of the resulting pressor compound b y the amine oxidase present in the tissue. T h u s there was an outpouring of, presumably, 3,4-dihydroxypbenylethylamine when blood was allowed to circulate through the kidney.

CAT

2.38 KG.

, f^^^ 194'

188

»94

™*,,

176

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1

3ASE

LINE L E F T KIDNEY UNCLAMPED CONTROL ICC . RINGERS S 0 L N . INJECTED AT 9J50

RIGHT I0MG.

li:42

12:02

Figure 8.

TIME , 3 0

SEC.

KIDNEY UNCLAMPED D O P A IN I C C . R I N G E R S

SOLN

Blood Pressure Response Following Re-establishment of Circulation through Kidney of Anesthetized C a t Renal artery and vein had been clamped 2 hours previously

T h e basic experiments b y B i n g have been confirmed. Schroeder et al. (144) have reported the isolation of a dialyzable pressor agent from the blood of hypertensive patients that was not present i n the blood of normotensive individuals and which had certain biological and chemical characteristics that would relate it to epinephrine or a closely similar compound. D r i l l (62) also has expressed the opinion that the pressor effects of anaerobic kidney extracts are due to the presence of tyramine and other pressor amines. Holtz and Credner (98) found that when D O P A was administered parenterally to man and to several animal species they could isolate 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine as such and i n a conjugated form from the urine. Page (124) has demonstrated the presence of D O P A decarboxylase activity i n the kidneys of man, guinea pigs, monkeys, and rabbits, but none was found i n the rat. Oster and Sorkin (123) made some interesting observations on the effect of intravenous injections of D O P A on the blood pressure of normotensive and h y pertensive cats and patients. I n both instances the pressor effect of a given injection of D O P A was greater i n the hypertensive subject. This they interpreted i n the light of Bing's work as attributable to impaired metabolism of the decarboxylated pressor amine in the kidneys of the subjects. None of the conventional renal function studies were mentioned b y them as having been performed on the subjects to substantiate this view, and the observation has not provoked substantiation elsewhere. Although the evidence presented to this point has been reasonably consistent, Page and Reed (125) observed that the intraperitoneal or intravenous injection of D O P A into the rat caused a marked and sustained rise i n blood pressure. T h i s would not have been anticipated, for Page (124) reported that rat tissues do not contain D O P A decarboxylase. Indeed, Page and Reed (125) have claimed that the blood pressure response of rats to D O P A cannot be used as a measure of the decarboxylase content of the tissues, nor as an indicator of decreased intrarenal oxygen tension. A few experiments were conducted i n barbiturate anesthetized cats and dogs wherein D O P A , phenylserine, p-hydroxyphenylserine ( D O P S ) , and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine were h r supply was clamped tern-

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porarily. T h e results of these experiments are shown i n Figures 7 through 11. Figure 7 illustrates the effect of unclamping the left kidney into which 3.0 m l . of Ringer's solution had been injected 2 hours previously as a control. Here, as i n almost all such experiments, reestablishment of circulation was followed b y a rise i n blood pressure. W h e n the blood supply to the other kidney into which 10 m g . of D O P A had been injected was re-established, a greater and reasonably sustained rise i n blood pressure followed. Figure 8 is the first of three illustrations taken from a single experiment on a cat. I n this case, both k i d neys were clamped immediately following the intrarenal arterial injection of 3 m l . of R i n g er's solution on one side and 3 m l . containing 10 m g . of dihydroxyphenylserine into the kidney on the other side. W h e n the control kidney was released, the blood pressure rose slowly over a period of about half a n hour. W h e n the circulation was released through the kidney into which D O P S was injected, the rise i n blood pressure was dramatic and was sustained well over a n hour, as is illustrated i n Figure 9. Figure 10 shows the effect of the intravenous injection of dihydroxyphenylserine into the same cat after the blood pressure had returned to a low level. T h e rise i n blood pressure was greater than when the drug was incubated i n the kidney before its release. I n Figures 11 and 12 the pressor effect of intravenously injected phenylserine, p-hydroxyphenylserine ( D O P S ) , and D O P A are compared with epinephrine in the dog. D O P A was inactive whereas all phenylserines caused a rise i n blood pressure. T h i s would seem to be good presumptive evidence that the rise i n blood pressure was due to decarboxylation of the several phenylserines. Although the decarboxylation of the sample of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine b y the kidney of the dog and cat i n vitro has been demonstrated, even a very small percentage contamination of the amino acid with the corresponding pressor amine (noradrenaline) would give rise to a considerable elevation of blood pressure, though probably not as sustained a duration of effect as was present i n this instance. However, it would be desirable to have a comparison of the pressor effect of D O P A and dihydroxyphenylserine repeated i n another laboratory using other samples of the drugs to check the point. Convincing as the preceding evidence may seem, there is just basis for a certain reservation concerning their significance. T h e y tend to imply that the balance between the decarboxylation of pressor amine precursors and the elimination of the amines is so delicately maintained that a n otherwise undetectable alteration i n renal function would permit the formation of such amines to exceed their destruction or excretion, resulting i n a n elevation of blood pressure. There is evidence to the contrary that must be considered. T h e kidney is neither the only nor even the major source of amine oxidase. Bhagvat, Blaschko, and Richter (80) and other investigators (109, 189) have found the enzyme to be widely distributed i n the body. Richter, Lee, and H i l l (184) determined that the h u man body was capable of deaminating phenethylamine at a rate of 26 mg. per kg. of body weight per hour. T h e fact that /8-phenyi-n-propylamine, which was deaminated b y amine oxidase, was not excreted as such when administered orally unless the liver was injured b y an hepatoxic agent, suggests that organ as a principal source of amine oxidase (25). I n the rat, which is so widely used for studies i n hypertension, decreased deamination of pressor amines in damaged kidneys does not contribute to the elevation of blood pressure, for there is no amine oxidase i n the kidney of that animal (122). Brown and Maegraith (45) found no reduction i n the amine oxidase content of other organs of hypertensive rats. F o r that matter, there is good reason to believe that deamination probably does not play a dominant role in the inactivation of phenolic pressor amines (105,186).

Elimination and Inactivation of Pressor Amines T h e elimination of phenolic pressor amines combines inactivation and excretion. T h i s field has been reviewed i n recent years b y Bernheim (14), D e Meio (59), Hartung (89), and Beyer (23, 26). Transmethylation as a step i n the 'deactivation" (from a cardiovascular standpoint) of noradrenaline i n the body is suggested b y the recent report b y Goldenberg, Pines, B a l d win, Greene, a n d R o h (82). Although they give no enzymologic studies to substantiate their hypothesis they suggest that essential hypertension might be considered to be a met1

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abolie disease of deficient transmethylation—that is, of norepinephrine to epinephrine. Their concept arose from experiments wherein they injected ^-epinephrine and if-norepinephrine into normotensive patients and others with essential hypertension. Direct measurements were made simultaneously of cardiac output, systemic arterial pressure, a n d pulmonary arterial pressure. Epinephrine, i n doses sufficient to cause significant h y pertension, was found to act as an over-all vasodilator as well as a powerful cardiac stimulant. T h e response of hypertensive patients to adrenaline was increased but was qualitatively the same as i n normal subjects. T h e primary action of noradrenaline was an intense generalized vasoconstriction without significant cardiac effects i n the dose range studied and this response was greater i n hypertensive than i n normotensive individuals. T h e vasoconstrictor action of Z-arterenol was blocked completely b y the synchronous administration of equal doses of epinephrine. T h e y conclude that their findings are compatible with the concept that norepinephrine is a sympathetic mediator of over-all vasoconstriction a n d suggest that a disturbed balance between both sympathetic transmitters could be concerned in the production of hypertension. Regardless of the untested merits of the above work, methyiation as a first step in the deactivation of noradrenaline i n the body is just as plausible as is the evidence that methyiation is the final step i n the synthesis of adrenaline. T h e evidence for and against this route of synthesis has been discussed previously i n this review. Tainter et al. (155) reported that i n dogs under phénobarbital anesthesia ^-arterenoi had a pressor activity 1.7 times that of l-epinephrine. I n this sense then, methyiation might be considered a process of inactivation. However, they found i n contrast that the acute toxicity of ^-epinephrine (LDso) was about four times that of ^-norepinephrine {114,155).

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Ten mg. of dihydroxyphenylserine had been injected into kidney at time renal pedicle was clamped, 2 hours preceding this record T h e role of amine oxidase i n the inactivation of sympathomimetic amines rests on a much firmer basis. T h e enzymatic oxidative deamination of tyramine was described first by Hare (87). K o h n (105) partially purified it but the enzyme is widely distributed i n mammalian tissues (30, 109), is cyanide insensitive (15), and has resisted isolation. T h e name monamine oxidase has been suggested for the enzyme (154) referred to i n the literature as tyramine oxidase, adrenaline oxidase (40), and aliphatic amine oxidase (128). This enzyme rapidly deaminates certain primary and secondary unsubstituted p - h y droxy- and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamines wherein the amino group is on the terminal carbon atom of the side chain (4,18,22,40,128).

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It seems established that the presence of amine oxidase i n the body, and especially that in the liver, determines the oral efficacy of £-phenylethylamines. I n general those compounds of this nature having an alpha carbon atom adjacent to that bearing the a m i n e — that is, /3-phenylisopropylamine—are not deaminated b y amine oxidase (134), are active on oral administration, and are excreted i n the urine as such following oral or parenteral administration (28, 102, 132, 151).

Figure 10. Pressor Response to Intravenous Injection of 10 M g . of 3,4-Dihydroxyphenylserine into C a t following Record O b t a i n e d in Figure 9 Principally because amine oxidase was so abundantly present i n the body and could be shown to deaminate certain pressor amines in vitro, it has been thought b y some to play a role i n the i n vivo inactivation of adrenaline and i n the etiology of hypertension. T h e a d ministration of crude amine oxidase has been reported to have decreased the blood pressure of normal and hypertensive rats (142), but this has not provoked substantiation. Croxatto and Croxatto (53, 54) have shown that renal hypertensinase and amine oxidase were different enzymes. Also, B i n g , Zucker, and Perkins (34) found angiotonin and amine oxidase to be fundamentally different. Thus the hypertensin and the phenylethyl (pressor) amine approaches to hypertension seem quite dissimilar on these grounds. However, it seems unlikely that amine oxidase plays a fundamental role i n the inactivation of the phenolic pressor amines even though it is of great importance i n determining the fate of the /3-phenylethylamines. T h e phenol oxidases probably play no important role i n the elimination of phenolic pressor amines, i n spite of the importance that has been attached to the oxidation of the catechol nucleus i n the past. T h e names phenolase and cresolase, polyphenol oxidase, and catechol oxidase serve to identify the enzyme with its mono- or diphenolic substrate, but they usually occur together and are difficultly separated. T h e enzymes have been purified and their characteristics have been described (56, 104, 106, 156). Beyer (21), Allés (3), and Randall and Hitchings (129) have described the relationship of structure of the phenolic pressor amines to the rate of oxidation of their nucleus in the presence of these enzymes. T h e functional significance and even the normal presence of other than a D O P A oxi-

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dase in the mammalian body have not been well established (31 ). Bloch (43) described the " D O P A reaction" of skin, i n which case melanin was formed when D O P A was incubated with skin, and this has been confirmed by Pugh (127) and Charles (50). Cadden and D i l l (47) reported a polyphenolase to be present in kidney, but this did not oxidize phenolic pressor amines. Hogeboom and Adams (94) have reported the presence of a phenolase i n a mouse melanoma that oxidized tyramine, and this is probably the most authentic representation of a phenol oxidase that could oxidize the phenolic nucleus of pressor amines i n the body. I n spite of the fact that phenol oxidase probably plays no important role i n the inactivation of pressor amines i n the body, it has been reported that the injection of the enzyme into hypertensive rats led to a reduction i n their blood pressure (14U 14®)It is difficult to assess the value of these experiments because of the nonspecific depressor effects of crude protein preparations on blood pressure. F o r example, Prinzmetal et al. (126) found that their tyrosinase preparations inactivated by boiling decreased the blood pressure of hypertensive patients as well as did their enzymicaliy active preparations. There are other modes of inactivation of pressor amines that probably are not highly significant factors from our present standpoint. These include the effect of the cytochrome C-cytochrome oxidase oxidation of catechol derivatives to the corresponding orthoquinone (41, 103), the oxidation of the phenolic nucleus by the ascorbic-dehydroascorbic acid system (18), and the deamination of pressor amines i n the presence of aldehydes (120, 121, 152). One may refer to the reviews by Hartung (89) and by Beyer (23) for discussions of these systems.

Figure 11.

Effect of Intravenously Injected Phenylserine, p-Hydroxyphenylserine, and /-Epinephrine on Blood Pressure of Anesthetized Dog

Conjugation appears to be the principal mode of inactivation of phenolic pressor amines in the body. In the author's experience the administration of phenolic pressor amines conjugated with organic or inorganic acid radicals on either the hydroxyl group of the ring or the aliphatic amino group reduces or abolishes activity. This is also true for the acetylation of p-aminophenylethylamines. Barger and Dale (13) found acetoxyphenylethylamine inactive on intravenous injection. Loeper (112) reported the synthesis of the sulfuric ester of tyramine and found it inactive as a pressor agent unless it was hydroiyzed to tyramine (111). T h e in vivo conjugation of sympathomimetic amines having a catechol nucleus seems well established. T h e identity of the conjugate seems clear but is not certain. Richter (133) and Richter and M a c i n t o s h (135) reported the excretion of conjugated epinephrine

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after the parent compound was administered orally. N o free compound was excreted. After acid hydrolysis the epinephrine was recovered i n the urine b y the iodoadrenochrome reaction. Also, the pressor effect of the hydrolyzed compound was demonstrated. T h e y believed the conjugation to be with sulfuric acid, and proposed that it was mediated through a sulfosynthase. However, they did not definitely identify the conjugate as be­ ing with sulfuric acid. Beyer a n d Shapiro (27) quantitated the iodoadrenochrome reac­ tion a n d reported that the 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethylamine derivatives, cobefrin and epinine, were excreted to the extent of about 65 a n d 8 5 % , respectively, as a hydrolyzable conjugate i n urine following their oral administration to m a n . B o t h compounds a n d epinephrine were excreted as conjugates b y dogs and this qualitative observation was not affected b y the route of administration of the drugs. T h e pressor effect of the hydrolyzed urine containing epinephrine was confirmed. Holtz and Credner (98) reported that when human subjects were given D O P A orally they excreted both free and conjugated 3,4-dihy­ droxyphenylethylamine. T h e y presumed the conjugation to be with sulfuric acid.

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Figure 12. Effect of Intravenously Injected /-Epinephrine, Dihydroxyphenylserine, and Dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) on Blood Pressure of Anesthetized Dog Although no free epinephrine is excreted under the conditions of those experiments just described, it is permissible to question whether they are representative of the fate of epinephrine as i t is secreted i n the body, or whether conjugation is a mode of inactivation of catechol pressor amines administered as drugs. T h e relatively minute amounts of adrenaline or noradrenaline secreted normally and the limitations of present analytical methods definitely handicap a direct approach to the problem. However, it has been possible to study the fate of adrenaline secreted b y the body i n a more or less physiological type of experiment. There is a tumor of the adrenal medulla that has been described as physiologically malignant but histologically benign (119). T h a t is to say, the symptoms of hypertension are rapidly progressive although the tumor cells are benign, within the meaning of that term to the pathologist. These cells secrete adrenaline i n large amounts that are at first released only intermittently but later the hypertension m a y be sustained. T h e paragan­ glioma is a similar type of tumor of the sympathetic chain ganglia that gives rise to clini­ cally identical symptoms. M u n t z (119) and his associates reported the removal of a pheochromocytoma that, on the basis of Chen's assay, was estimated to contain 2.3496 grams of adrenaline. T h e y estimated that it would take a herd of 31 cattle to yield the same amount of adrenaline. Others have reported the isolation of adrenaline from such tumors,

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although Bulbring and B u r n (46) a n d H o l t o n (95) have reported recently that both normal adrenal gland a n d the pheochromocytoma contain noradrenaline i n addition to adrenaline. T h e author (24) has h a d an opportunity to study the pheochromocytomas removed from three patients, and their urine specimens obtained between and during hypertensive attacks (116). I n general, only free adrenaline a n d noradrenaline were found i n the tumor and only conjugated drug i n the urine at the time of the hypertensive attacks. Actually the differentiation between epinephrine and arterenoi was made only i n two of the cases for the iodoadrenochrome method (27) does not differentiate between the two compounds. Auerbach a n d Angell (9) developed a method to estimate arterenoi i n the presence of epinephrine. Using this method they found arterenoi to be present i n U . S . P . samples of epinephrine from biological source to the extent of 10.5 to 17.5%, i n confirmation of the work of Goldenberg et al. (81). Indeed, Tullar (159) was able to isolate Z-arterenol from natural U . S . P . epinephrine. T h u s it seems incontrovertible that noradrenaline as well as adrenaline is a normal constituent of the adrenal medulla. T h i s would seem to be consistent with the view previously expressed herein that norepinephrine is a precursor that can be converted into epinephrine b y transmethylation. T h e conjugation of epinephrine i n the body is with both sulfuric and glucuronic acids, although there seems to be some difference of opinion as to which is the more important route. Arnolt and D e M e i o (5,60), Bernheim (17), and Lipschitz and Beuding (110) have reported that the conjugation of phenols i n the intestine, liver, and spleen is an enzymatic process. Apparently it is a coupled oxidative system. I n sulfate conjugation, inorganic sulfate serves as the precursor (108). Deichmann (58) fed epinephrine to rabbits a n d found a marked increase i n the excretion of organic sulfates without a n increase i n the excretion of glucuronates. H e concluded that epinephrine conjugation was principally with sulfuric acid. Conversely, Dodgson, Garton, and Williams (61) conducted a similar i n vestigation wherein d-epinephrine was adrninistered orally. N o free drug was excreted, but i n this case the conjugation was with glucuronic acid. One would be led to believe that probably both sulfuric and glucuronic acids play a role i n the conjugation of catechol pressor amines. T h e fate of monophenolic pressor amines is not so certain. Ewins and Laidlaw found that when large amounts of tyramine were fed to dogs, up to 2 5 % was excreted i n the urine as p-hydroxyphenylaeetie acid. T h e y found that this occurred when tyramine was perfused through liver and uterus, but when the drug was perfused through the heart it was destroyed (78). Similarly, Bernheim and Bernheim (16) found that the heart was capable of opening the phenolic ring i n tyramine. Present evidence indicates that monophenolic pressor amines, such as tyramine, m a y be excreted partially as such and in a conjugated form with and without deamination and oxidation to the corresponding acid. Beyer and Stutzman (29) administered tyramine and /3-(p-hydroxyphenyl)isopropylamine to both m a n and dog. Although a physiological effect of the agent was not demonstrable, the urine was found to contain a compound that appeared to be identical with the drug that was administered. T h i s was judged b y the fact that it was oxidized b y phenol oxidase, deaminated b y amine oxidase i n the case of t y ramine, and possessed pressor properties. T h e amount of the material excreted was not determined, but since then the results have been repeated and confirmed qualitatively. Undoubtedly this does not account for all the drug that was given, and it is quite possible that the drug was conjugated loosely during its passage through the body. Hartles and Williams (88) studied the detoxication of p-hydroxybenzyiamine and p-hydroxybenzylmethylamine administered to rabbits. T h e y found in both instances that the compounds were excreted as the sulfates, the sulfate conjugation being greater for the primary amine. B o t h compounds also were deaminated and excreted as p-hydroxyphenylacetic acid a n d the corresponding glucuronide.

Comment Although it has been beyond the province of this review to discuss the several theories of the etiology of essential hypertension, it is the opinion of this author that the various

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concepts are not mutually exclusive a n d that to hold one or another theory wholly ac­ countable for the clinical picture of essential hypertension is misleading and unwarranted at present. T h e probability that i n many or even most instances hypertension is neuro­ genic i n origin seems most attractive. Since the autonomic impulses that initiate vaso­ constriction are adrenergic, Sympathin Ε (noradrenaline), and to a lessor extent adrenaline, undoubtedly play a major role i n the earlier phases of the disease. Vasoconstriction brought about in this manner through psychic stimulation has been shown to decrease renal blood flow. It is attractive to hypothesize that this may initiate a more severe renal cortical ischemia than is apparent from over-all blood flow measure­ ments, if the cortical vasoconstriction should be accompanied b y the opening of subcortical arteriovenous shunts such as have been described b y T r u e t a (157). Such a circumstance would set up the conditions requisite for the elaboration of renin, or the decarboxylated precursors of adrenaline or noradrenaline that require adequate oxygenation for their i n ­ activation, or the establishment of the endocrine kidney of Selye (146). Over the course of time it is possible that these nephrogenic agents m a y perpetuate the hypertension and the conditions for their continued function. T h e pathogenesis of the degenerative arteriolitic lesions would be initiated, on this basis, as reparative and compensatory responses to the traumatic effect of the early wide fluctuations i n pressure and the later continued i n ­ sult from that source. I n the case of the pheochromocytoma, that mimics so closely the clinical picture of essential hypertension of other origin, the initiation and progress of the disease are attributable to an exaggeration of the normal functions of the adrenal medulla.

Acknowledgment T h e records of rates of decarboxylation and blood pressure studies on the amino acid precursors of pressor amines were obtained with the cooperation of W . M . Govier and A . R. Latven.

Bibliography (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (27) (28) (29) (30) (31)

Abelous, J . E., and Bardier, E., J. physiol. et path. gen., 10, 627 (1908). Ibid., 11, 34 (1909). Alles, G . Α., Blohm, C. L . , and Saunders, P. R., J. Biol. Chem., 144, 757 (1942). Alles, G . Α., and Heegaard, Ε. V., Ibid., 147, 487 (1943). Arnolt, R. I., and De Meio, R. H . , Rev. soc. argentina biol., 17, 570 (1941). Ibid., 30, 40 (1942). Arnow, L . E., J. Biol. Chem., 120, 151 (1937). Arnow, L . E., Science, 87, 308 (1938). Auerbach, M . E., and Angell, E., Science, 109, 537 (1949). Bacq, Ζ. M . , Ann. physiol., 10, 467 (1934). Bacq, Ζ. M . , and Fischer, P., Arch. intern. physiol., 55, 73 (1947). Bain, W., Lancet, 178, 1190 (1910). Barger, G., and Dale, H . H . , J. physiol. (London), 41, 19 (1910). Bernheim, F . , "Interaction of Drugs and Cell Catalysts," Minneapolis, Minn., Burgess Pub­ lishing Co., 1942. Bernheim, F . , J. Biol. Chem., 133, 485 (1940). Bernheim, F., and Bernheim, M . L . C., J. Biol. Chem., 153, 369 (1944). Bernheim, F., and Bernheim, M . L . C., J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 78, 394 (1943). Beyer, Κ. H . , Ibid., 71, 151 (1941). Ibid., p. 394. Ibid., 76, 149 (1942). Ibid., 77, 247 (1943). Ibid., 79, 85 (1943). Beyer, Κ. H . , Physiol. Revs., 26, 169 (1946). Beyer, K . H . , et al., to be published. Beyer, Κ. H . , and Lee, W . V., J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 74, 155 (1942). Beyer, Κ . H., and Morrison, H. S., IND. E N G . C H E M . , 37, 143 (1945). Beyer, Κ. H . , and Shapiro, S. H., Am. J. Physiol., 144, 321 (1945). Beyer, Κ. H . , and Skinner, J . T., J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 68, 419 (1940). Beyer, K . H., and Stutzman, J . W., Physiol. Revs., 26, 183 (1946). Bhagvat, K . , Blaschko, H., and Richter, D., Biochem. J., 33, 1338 (1939). Bhagvat, K . , and Richter, D., Ibid., 32, 1397 (1938).

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(32) Bing, R. J . , Am. J. Physiol., 132, 497 (1941). (33) Bing, R. J., and Zucker, M . B., J. Exptl. Med., 74, 235 (1941). (34) Bing, R. J., Zucker, M . B., and Perkins, W., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 48, 372 (1941). (35) Blaschko, H., in "Physiology, Chemistry, and Applications," Vol. 2, New York, Academic Press, in press. (36) Blaschko, H . , J. Physiol. (London), 96, 50P (1939). (37) Ibid., 101, 337 (1942). (38) Blaschko, H . , personal communication. (39) Blaschko, H . , Holton, P., and Stanley, G . H . S., Brit. J. Pharmacol., 3, 315 (1948). (40) Blaschko, H . , Richter, D., and Schlossman, H . , Biochem. J., 31, 2187 (1937). (41) Blaschko, H . , and Schlossman, H . , J. Physiol. (London), 98, 130 (1940). (42) Blaschko, H . , and Stanley, G . H. S., Biochem. J., 42, iii (1948). (43) Bloch, Β., Z. physiol. Chem., 100, 226 (1917). (44) Bradley, S. E., New Eng. J. Med., 231, 421 (1944). (45) Brown, G . M . , and Maegraith, B. G., Brit. J. Exptl. Path., 22, 108 (1941). (46) Bulbring, E., and Burn, J . H . , Nature, 163, 363 (1949). (47) Cadden, J . F., and Dill, L . V., J. Biol. Chem., 143, 105 (1942). (48) Cannon, W. B., and Rosenblueth, Α., Am. J. Physiol., 104, 557 (1933). (49) Cannon, W . B . , and Rosenblueth, Α., "Autonomic Neuroeffector Systems," New York, Macmillan Co., 1937. (50) Charles, D . R., Genetics, 23, 523 (1938). (51) Corcoran, A . C., and Page, I. H . , J. Am. Med. Assoc., 116, 690 (1941). (52) Corcoran, A . C., Taylor, R. D., and Page, I. H . , Ann. Internal Med., 28, 560 (1948). (53) Croxatto, H . , and Croxatto, R., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 48, 392 (1941). (54) Croxatto, R., Croxatto, H . , and Marty, L . , Ibid., 52, 64 (1943). (55) Dalgleish, C. E., and Mann, F . G., J. Chem. Soc, 1947, 658. (56) Dalton, H . R., and Nelson, J . M . , J. Am. Chem. Soc., 60, 3085 (1938). (57) Dawes, G . S., Brit. J. Pharmacol., 1, 21 (1946). (58) Deichmann, W. B., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 54, 335 (1943). (59) De Meio, R. H . , Chem. Products, 6, 37 (1943). (60) De Meio, R. H . , and Arnolt, R. I., J. Biol. Chem., 156, 577 (1944). (61) Dodgson, K . S., Garton, G . Α., and Williams, R. T., Biochem. J., 41, P1 (1947). (62) Drill, V . Α., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 49, 557 (1942). (63) Emerson, R. L . , Beitr. Chem. Physiol. u. Path., 1, 501 (1902). (64) Euler, U . S. v., Acta Physiol. Scand., 11, 168 (1946). (65) Ibid., 12, 73 (1946). (66) Ibid., 13, 1 (1947). (67) Ibid., 16, 63 (1948). (68) Euler, U . S. v., Arch. intern. physiol., 55, 73 (1947). (69) Euler, U . S. v., J. Physiol. (London), 105, 38 (1946). (70) Euler, U . S. v., and Astrom, Α., Acta Physiol. Scand., 16, 97 (1948). (71) Euler, U . S. v., and Sjostrand, T., Naturwissenschaften, 31, 145 (1943). (72) Evans, J . Α., and Bartels, C. C., Ann. Internal Med., 30, 307 (1949). (73) Ewins, A . J . , and Laidlaw, P. P., J. Physiol. (London), 41, 78 (1910). (74) Gaddum, J . H . , Brit. Med. J., 1, 713 (1938). (75) Gaddum, J . H . , and Goodwin, L . G., J. Physiol. (London), 105, 357 (1947). (76) Gaddum, J . H . , Jang, C. S., and Kwiatkowski, H . , Ibid., 96, 104 (1939). (77) Gaddum, J . H . , and Kwiatkowski, H . , Ibid., 94, 87 (1938). (78) Ibid., 96, 385 (1939). (79) Gaddum, J . H . , and Schild, H . , Ibid., 80, 9P (1934). (80) Goldblatt, Physiol. Revs., 27, 120 (1947). (81) Goldenberg, M . , Faber, M . , Alston, E. J., and Chargaff, E. C., Science, 109, 534 (1949). (82) Goldenberg, M . , Pines, K . L . , Baldwin, E. de F., Greene, D . E., and Roh, C. E., Am. J. Med., 5, 792 (1948). (83) Goldring, W., and Chasis, H . , "Hypertension and Hypertensive Disease," Chap. IV, New York, Commonwealth Fund, 1944. (84) Greer, C. M . , Pinkston, J . O., Baxter, J . H . , and Brannon, E. S., J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 60, 108 (1937); 62, 189 (1938). (85) Guggenheim, M . , "Die Biogenen Amine," 3rd ed., p. 431, Basel and New York, A . Karger, 1940. (86) Gurin, S., and Delluva, A . M . , J. Biol. Chem., 170, 545 (1947). (87) Hare, M . L . C., Biochem. J., 22, 968 (1928). (88) Hartles, R. L . , and Williams, R. T., Ibid., 43, 293 (1948). (89) Hartung, W . H . , Ann. Rev. Biochem., 15, 593 (1946). (90) Hartung, W . H . , unpublished. (91) Heard, R. D . H . , and Raper, H . S., Biochem. J., 27, 36 (1933). (92) Heard, R. D . H . , and Welch, A . D., Biochem. J., 29, 998 (1935). (93) Heinsen, Η. Α., Ζ. physiol. Chem., 245, 1 (1936). (94) Hogeboom, G . H . , and Adams, M . H . , J. Biol. Chem., 145, 273 (1942). (95) Holton, P., Nature, 163, 217 (1949).

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Holtz, P., Naturwissenschaften, 25, 457 (1937). Holtz, P., and Credner, K . , Arch. exptl. Pathol. Pharmakol., 199, 145 (1942). Ibid., 200, 356 (1942-43). Holtz, P., Credner, K . , and Strubing, C., Z. physiol. Chem., 280, 9 (1944). Holtz, P., Heise, R., and Lüdtke, K . , Arch. exptl. Pathol. Pharmakol., 91, 87 (1938). Jacobsen, E., Trans. Ν. Y. Acad. Sci., 2, 49 (1948). Jacobsen, E., and Gad, I., Arch. exptl.Pathol.Pharmakol., 196, 34 (1940). Keilin, D., and Hartree, E. F . , Proc. Roy. Soc., 125B, 171 (1938). Keilin, D., and Mann, T., Ibid., 125B, 187 (1938). Kohn, H . I., Biochem. J., 31, 1693 (1937). Kubowitz, F., Biochem. Z., 299, 32 (1938). Kuntz, Α., "Autonomic Nervous System," Philadelphia, Lea and Febiger, 1945 Laidlow, J . C., and Young, L . , Biochem. J., 42, P1 (1948). Langemann, H . , Helv. Physiol. Pharmacol. Acta, 2, 367 (1944). Lipschitz, W. L . , and Beuding, E., J. Biol. Chem., 129, 333 (1939). Loeper, M . , Loeper, J . , Lemaire, Α., Cottet, J . , and Parrod, J., Compt. rend. soc. biol., 128, 1050 (1938). (112) Loeper, M . , and Parrod, J., Bull. soc. chim. biol., 20, 1117 (1938). (113) Loewi, O., Pflügers Arch. ges. Physiol., 237, 504 (1936). (114) Luduena, F . P., Ananenko, E . , Siegmund, Ο. H . , and Miller, L . C., J. Pharmacol., 95, 155 (1949). (115) Mann, F . G., and Dalgliesh, C. E., Nature, 158, 375 (1946). (116) Mayock, R. L . , and Rose, E . , Am. J. Med. Sci., 213, 324 (1947). (117) Medes, G., Biochem. J., 26, 917 (1932). (118) Moss, A . R., and Schoenheimer, R., J. Biol. Chem., 135, 415 (1940). (119) Muntz, H . H . , Ritchey, J . O., and Gatch, W. D., Ann. Internal Med., 26, 133 (1947). (120) Oster, Κ. Α., Nature, 150, 289 (1942). (121) Oster, Κ. Α., and Mulinos, M . G., J. Pharmacol., 80, 132 (1944). (122) Oster, Κ. Α., and Schlossman, N . C., J. Cellular Comp. Physiol., 20, 373 (1942). (123) Oster, Κ. Α., and Sorkin, S. Z., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 51, 67 (1942). (124) Page, E . W., Arch. Biochem., 8, 145 (1945). (125) Page, E . W., and Reed, R., Am. J. Physiol., 143, 122 (1945). (126) Prinzmetal, M . , Ailes, G . Α., Margoles, C., Kayland, S., and Davis, D . S., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 50, 288 (1942). (127) Pugh, C. Ε. M . , Biochem. J., 27, 476 (1933). (128) Pugh, C. Ε. M . , and Quastel, J . H . , Ibid., 31, 286 (1937). (129) Randall, L . O., and Hitchings, G . H . , J. Pharmacol., 80, 77 (1944). (130) Raper, H . S., Biochem. J., 26, 2000 (1932). (131) Raper, H . S., Physiol. Revs., 8, 245 (1928). (132) Richter, D., Biochem. J., 32, 1763 (1938). (133) Richter, D., J. Physiol. (London), 98, 361 (1940). (134) Richter, D., Lee, M . H . , and Hill, D., Biochem. J., 35, 1225 (1941). (135) Richter, D . , and Macintosh, F . C., Am. J. Physiol., 135, 1 (1941). (136) Richter, D., and Tingey, N . H . , J. Physiol. (London), 97, 265 (1939). (137) Rosenmund, K . W., and Dornsaft, H . , Ber., 52, 1734 (1919). (138) Rothman, Α., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 44, 485 (1940). (139) Schapira, G., Compt. rend. soc. biol., 139, 36 (1945). (140) Ibid., 140, 173 (1946). (141) Schroeder, Η. Α., Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. Med., 44, 172 (1940). (142) Schroeder, Η. Α., Science, 95, 306 (1942). (143) Schroeder, Η. Α., and Adams, M . H . , J. Exptl. Med., 73, 531 (1940). (144) Schroeder, Η. Α., Goldman, M . L . , and Olsen, N . S., J. Clin. Invest., 27, 555 (1948). (145) Selye, H . , Ann. Internal Med., 29, 403 (1948). (146) Selye, H . , Nature, 158, 131 (1946). (147) Selye, H . , "Textbook of Endocrinology," Chap. xii, Acta Endocrinologica, Montreal, Université

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(96) (97) (98) (99) (100) (101) (102) (103) (104) (105) (106) (107) (108) (109) (110) (111)

(148) (149) (150) (151) (152) (153) (154) (155) (156) (157) (158) (159)

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Vigneaud, V . du, Proc. Am. Phil. Soc., 92, 127 (1948). Vinet, Α., Bull. soc. chem. biol., 22, 559 (1940). Vinet, Α., Compt. rend. soc. biol., 210, 552 (1940). West, G . B., Brit. J. Pharmacol., 3, 189 (1948). White, P. D., Ann. Internal Med., 27, 740 (1947). Wilkins, R. W., Culbertson, J . W., and Halperin, M .H.,Ibid., 30, 291 (1949). Wolf, S., Pfeiffer, J . B., Ripley, H . S., Winter, O. S., and Wolff, H . G., Ibid., 29, 1055 (1948).

Discussion of Paper on Biosynthesis and Metabolism of Phenylethyl (Pressor) Amines

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GORDON A. ALLES University of California Medical School, San Francisco, Calif.

A s stated b y Beyer, it now does appear that both noradrenaline and adrenaline are i m ­ plicated i n the humoral mediation of adrenergic nerve impulses. T h e hypothesis that adrenoxine as produced b y any action of a catechol oxidase in the body acts under appro­ priate conditions as the vasodilator substance presently appears to be very doubtful, a l ­ though some of the evidence along this line presented b y B a c q (1) and b y Heirman and B a c q (7) appeared to be reliable. Shortly after their reports appeared Carroll Handley and the author i n the pharmacology laboratory of the University of California M e d i c a l School tried to confirm the apparent reversal of net vasomotor effects of catechol oxidase oxidation of adrenaline solutions but failed to observe any effects beyond those that could be ascribed to the destruction of a part of the adrenaline activity. In some recent comparisons of the pressor responses of adrenaline and noradrenaline, the appreciably longer duration of pressor action of the nor compound was noticed, and this is evidenced in the figures shown b y Luduena and co-workers (10) i n their recent care­ ful quantitative studies on the relative activities of the two compounds as estimated b y various methods on different animals and organs of the body. T h i s longer duration of ac­ tion of noradrenaline indicates that the over-ail inactivation rate i n the body is indeed slower. T h i s is i n agreement with the indications from the work of West (15) on jugu­ lar/portal and splenic artery/vein equipressor ratios that the two compounds are appar­ ently inactivated differently b y the liver and spleen. It may indeed be, as B a c q and Fisher (2) and Goldenberg and co-workers (6) suggest, that the synthesis of adrenaline is through the transmethylation of noradrenaline as a final step and that the deactivation of noradrenaline is through the transmethylation of noradrenaline as an initial step. I n this connection it is of interest that Shaw (13) found in his studies on the oxidation of adrenaline and noradrenaline b y a n arsenomolybic reagent that the former catechol amine was about twelve times more rapidly oxidized and that an increase of about five times was from some phenomenon associated with the addi­ tion of alkali. Just what the phenomena noted b y Shaw are due to is not clear but they do demonstrate that an order of five to twelve times difference i n oxidation rates between noradrenaline and adrenaline m a y be on some simple chemical reaction basis. T h e thought that transmethylation of noradrenaline may be an initial step i n its de­ activation in the body makes one wonder whether further transmethylation of adrenaline is also not a common biological process. A s a result of studies of the various alkaloids of plants of the Ephedra species, it was noted that not only ^-ephedrine and its stereoisomer dpseudoephedrine are present but also that ^-norephedrine, d-norpseudoephedrine, lmethylephedrine, and d-methylpseudoephedrine (8) are present. T h e quaternary t r i methylammonium compounds corresponding to these were not reported but very

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probably were not looked for and would be difficult of isolation in pure form because of their high base strength. T h e question as to whether all of the possible ΛΓ-methylation compounds of noradren­ aline are indeed commonly present i n storage places i n the body such as the adrenal me­ dulla, or the carotid body, or other ganglia or peripheral synapses will probably not be a n ­ swered soon, for the intensity of the pharmacological activity of iV'-dimethylnoradrenaline and noradrenaline trimethylammonium ion is not great as reported by Stehle, Melville, and Oldham (14) who unfortunately do not give any of the chemical details regarding the identity or purity of the preparations they used. However, the question as to whether the first methyiation step, the conversion from noradrenaline to adrenaline, is an active process over-ail in the body should be susceptible of fairly easy study b y repeating the experiments of Richter and M a c i n t o s h (12) and of Beyer and Shapiro (4) but administering noradrenaline instead of adrenaline. T h e urineexcreted compounds could be bioassayed after suitable hydrolysis and the relative amounts of noradrenaline and adrenaline in the hydrolyzate determined by using the differential activities of the two compounds on rabbit intestine and rat uterus as first reported b y West (16). T h e differences between normal persons and those i n successive stages of es­ sential hypertension with regard to their abilities to conjugate noradrenaline and adrena­ line and with regard to their abilities to transform the former into the latter surely should be a subject of precise chemical study in the near future. Although interest and knowledge today is rapidly increasing with respect to norad­ renaline and adrenaline as humoral mediators i n the functioning of the sympathetic nerv­ ous system, the possibilities should not be overlooked that less intensely active compounds may be implicated i n the normal or pathological functioning of this nervous system i n man. Along this line the vasoconstrictor material recently isolated from beef serum b y Rapport, Green, and Page (11) is of considerable interest. T h i s substance i n its purest state as re­ ported has a vasoconstrictor activity of about that of tyramine though its various color reactions in relation to its activity indicate it to be considerably different from this com­ pound. Tyramine has appeared to be ordinarily quite rapidly inactivated i n the body, pos­ sibly b y the amine oxidase mechanism that is active on aliphatic and phenylaliphatic amines. However, this should perhaps be reinvestigated i n relation to hypertension i n man, for B a i n (8) apparently found some isoamylamine i n the urine i n man, and although Lockett (9) was not able to find this compound i n her studies, there are indications of some unknown variables being involved. Lockett did find pressor bases in urine that were more active than isoamylamine and on further study a close correspondence between one of the bases and nicotine was established. However, her preparations of male urine which i n ­ cluded some tobacco smokers corresponded to but 50 to 70 micrograms of nicotine per liter in physiological pressor activity and those of female nonsmokers' urine, to but 17 micro­ grams of nicotine per liter. T h e reinvestigation of von Euler (S) of urine of nonsmokers indicated up to about 10 mg. per liter of ether-soluble bases and a pressor activity corresponding to about 500 micro­ grams per liter. Piperidine was isolated and found to be the principal base present in the ether-soluble bases and comparison between the pressor assay and colorimetric piperidine determinations showed a close correspondence. It was further reported that piperidine was present i n the urines of the horse, pig, cat, and rabbit as well as that of man. The meaning of its presence or its possible relation to the metabolism of other amines or the functioning of the sympathetic nervous system i n normal or hypertensive man has not yet been developed. In closing, the excellent presentation of Beyer is recommended for close study by bio­ logical, medical, and organic chemists. It is very well balanced, up-to-date, and the result of much thinking and working along the lines he has talked about.

Literature Cited (1) Bacq, J. Physiol. (London), 92, 2 8 (1938). (2) Bacq and Fisher, Arch. intern. physiol., 55, 73 (1947).

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ALLES—DISCUSSION OF PAPER ON PHENYLETHYL (PRESSOR) AMINES Bain, Quart. J. Exptl. Physiol., 8, 229 (1915). Beyer and Shapiro, Am. J. Physiol., 144, 321 (1945). Euler, von, Acta Physiol. Scand., 8, 380 (1944). Goldenberg, Pines, Baldwin, Greene, and Roh, Am. J. Med., 5, 792 (1948). Heirman and Bacq, Arch. intern. physiol., 57, 82 (1940). Henry, "Plant Alkaloids," 3rd ed., Philadelphia, P. Blakiston's Son & Co., 1939. Lockett, J. Physiol. (London), 103, 68-165 (1944). Luduena, Ananenko, Siegmund, and Miller, J. Pharmacol., 95, 155 (1949). Rapport, Green, and Page, J. Biol. Chem., 174, 735 (1948). Richter and MacIntosh, Am. J. Physiol., 135, 1 (1941). Shaw, Biochem. J., 32, 19 (1938). Stehle, Melville, and Oldham, J. Pharmacol. Exptl. Therap., 56, 473 (1936). West, Brit. J. Pharmacol., 3, 189 (1948). West, J. Physiol. (London), 106, 418 (1947).

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